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| OpenBSD General Other questions regarding OpenBSD which do not fit in any of the categories below. |
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I have never heard of "free VPN." The VPN technologies usable with OpenBSD are:
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Which VPN? The only thing you've described so far is "free". All of the technologies I mentioned above are free. All of them are different. One or more might meet your needs. But we don't know what your needs are, other than to not pay a license fee to someone.
Until you specify your context, no one can provide direction. The example Ocicat pointed to (that ai-danno wrote), happened to be server-to-server using IPSec. What do you need to do?
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Guess who you should be asking?
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You seemed to have missed my earliest point, which I will restate once again:
VPN describes functionality. VPN is not a product. VPN is not even one technology. The four examples I provided each use entirely different technologies to provide VPN functionality.VPN stands for "Virtual Private Networking." These allow private networking -- as if you were on a local network -- over public networks, such as the Internet. Each end of a VPN connection must use the same technology: OpenVPN to OpenVPN, IPSec to IPSec, SSH to SSH, etc. These all provide similar functionality, but they are entirely different from each other. There are several VPN technologies that can be used with Windows. Three of the four technologies I mentioned above -- IPSec, PPTP, and OpenVPN -- can be used with Windows. Which one is your friend running? Only your friend can tell you. If your friend is running a Windows service, then he knows (or can find) the name of the service. If your friend is running a Windows executable, then he knows (or can find) the name of the .exe.
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OpenBSD LiveCDs/LiveDVDs Last edited by jggimi; 29th May 2008 at 05:15 PM. Reason: clarifyied definition |
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Quote:
In order to confirm that, while using SymVPN on my mobile phone Nokia N95 (S60 Symbian based S60 3rd phone), I was able to successfully connect this host with other Username and Password. That means that these credentials are in fact for accessing the PPTP VPN account. Therefore, when your friend were telling you about using this account information in Windows to connect VPN server, he was talking about PPTP VPN client that could be used from Windows computer to access this PPTP VPN Server. PPTP VPN client is included in Windows XP, Vista, 2003 and probably in other versions of Windows. "Free VPN" in this case means the you can use this account information for free to connect this PPTP VPN Server. For how long? No one knows unless you will ask the owner of that host. Last edited by virano; 7th February 2009 at 09:46 AM. |
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mfaridi: please edit your post and remove userid/pw and domain name. You should never publish private information here that you do not want spammers and script kiddies to see. And in this case, this is private information that you do not own.
There is no product by the name of "freevpn" that I can find with Google. I found reference to that domain name, but they were obviously not in English. If you have questions about using this service, whatever it might be, whether it is actually a Virtual Private Network or just something that happens to use the same three letters .... contact your friend. We cannot help you.
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@mfaridi, What's wrong with you? Why would you post that here? you're putting your friends network at risk...
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Did you read what I wrote about this "service"?
A userid/pw and domain name are insufficient information, unless this service, whatever it is, is designed to be run from a browser. You seem to lack a basic understanding of TCP/IP networking. If that is so, perhaps this extremely brief and absolutely incomplete overview will be helpful. You may be aware that the Domain Name System, DNS, converts domain names to IP addresses. An IP address is used to route packets of information from one computer to another.When you provide nothing but a domain name and userid/pw, as you did above, you tell us nothing about a networking service. Unless that service happens to be a web server, you leave it to us to research your friend's facilities. None of us want to do that, and, as I'm typing this from inside a corporate firewall, I cannot. I would be unwilling to do so even if I had a clear Internet connection. You must contact your friend and find out:
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OpenBSD LiveCDs/LiveDVDs Last edited by jggimi; 29th May 2008 at 06:10 PM. Reason: clarity |
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I asked him to do that back in May, danno.
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